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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, March 13, 2008  |  02:30 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, March 13, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender

How Did H-1B Visas Get Such a Bad Reputation?
NetworkWorld
As the April 1 deadline to file H-1B visa applications nears, the debate is heating up among IT industry watchers and skilled workers over whether the often maligned program adequately serves U.S. companies or American workers as it was originally intended.

Harvard Grad Students Hit in Computer Intrusion
ComputerWorld
Harvard University is offering a year of free credit monitoring to over 6,000 individuals after their Social Security numbers were compromised when a Web server for the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences was hacked in February.

CIOs Promote 'Fusion' Strategy
ComputerWorld
Forget about mere IT-business alignment. At many companies, the new name of the game is melding technology and business operations, with CIOs getting a say in setting not only IT plans but business strategies as well.

Microsoft Executives Urge More Long Term U.S. Investment in Tech
InformationWeek
The United States risks falling behind other countries in innovation if the government doesn't invest and shape policy to keep it ahead,Microsoft chairman Bill Gates and chief research officer Craig Mundie warned in a speech and discussion with Virginia's technology leaders Thursday.

United States, Germany Will Share Biometric Data
Federal Computer Week
The United States and Germany will share some biometric information in their respective fingerprint databases, officials from both countries announced Tuesday. It is hoped the arrangement will help stymie the efforts of known and suspected terrorists from entering each country.

Is Parallel Computing the Next Big Thing?
CIO Insight
Parallel computing has been hyped for years as the next big thing in technology. But now, Microsoft's chief research officer thinks it's time to set the company's long-term technological direction in line with this idea.

NTP Soon to Feature Extra Timeliness
Government Computer News
Internet Engineer Task Force engineers are sharpening the Network Time Protocol's granularity of time measurements, as well as making the veritable time-synchronization standard compatible with version 6 of the Internet Protocol.

Winter Olympics Security Hinges on Information Sharing
Washington Technology
Information sharing needs to improve between the U.S. and Canadian governments, and between public agencies and the private sector, to prepare for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, an industry expert told Congress yesterday.

Password-Stealing Hackers Infect Thousands of Web Pages
InfoWorld
According to McAfee researchers, hackers looking to steal passwords used in popular online games have infected more than 10,000 Web pages in recent days. The infected Web sites look no different than before, but the attackers have added a small bit of JavaScript code that redirects visitors' browsers to an invisible attack launched from the China-based servers.

Next Tax Proposed to Replace Md. Tech Tax
The Baltimore Sun
Support is mounting in the General Assembly for a plan to replace Maryland's new computer services tax with an income tax surcharge on top earners. If approved, the income tax would take effect July 1, the day the technology tax would otherwise go into effect.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Tuesday, March 11, 2008  |  12:37 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender

Tech Companies Feel Skilled Labor Shortage
NetworkWorld
The National Foundation for American Policy released Monday its findings that U.S. technology and defense companies average 470 and 1,265 high-skilled job openings, respectively. Research was conducted between December 2007 and February 2008.

Senator Describes Black Market in H-1B Visas
ComputerWorld
U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley said yesterday that the White House isn't enforcing the H-1B program, and he cited a number of abuses in a letter to Homeland Security Department Secretary Michael Chertoff asking him to detail what the department is doing to enforce the program.

Security Must Evolve, CERT Official Says
ComputerWorld
Security has to evolve into something that supports business, rather than the other way around, according to Lisa Young, senior member of the technical staff at Carnegie Mellon University's Computer Emergency Response Team. She explains the tendency is to want to start locking things down, so security is something that disables, not enables, business.

Should You Hire a Convicted Hacker?
InformationWeek
The very skills that can land hackers behind bars are skills they share with high-achieving, law-abiding IT security professionals. However, convicted hackers looking for legitimate employment are not necessarily finding it in the enterprise after they complete their sentences. Some high-profile hackers have become teachers, lecturers and journalists.

Coast Guard Tests Fingerprinting at Borders
USA Today
In an ongoing test program, the Coast Guard has been taking digital fingerprints of people picked up on boats headed to Puerto Rico from the Dominican Republic. The fingerprints are then checked against a government database that shows deportation orders and criminal records; this practice has led to more than 100 prosecutions in the past year.

Ohio Supreme Court Refuses to Interfere with Secretary of State's Directive for Paper Ballots
Government Technology
The Supreme Court of Ohio unanimously denied the Union County Commissioners' request for an order that would have prevented Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner from implementing a recent directive she issued to require county boards of elections using touch screen machines to have backup paper ballots available for voters who want them.

Candidates Use Predictive Analytics to Seek Votes
eWeek
With only so much money to go around, candidates are trying to court voters in smart ways. One emerging method is microtargeting, a means of helping campaigns target their funds toward the right voters — those who haven't decided to vote for another candidate achieved by analyzing combinations of demographic, marketing and other forms of data.

Cyber Storm II Underway
Federal Computer Week
Players from nine states, four foreign governments, 18 federal agencies and 40 private companies that work in information technology, telecommunications, chemicals, and pipe and rail transportation infrastructure have begum the weeklong exercise sponsored by the Homeland Security Department.

NSA Extends Access Control to Network Storage
Government Computer News
The National Security Agency is leading an effort to extend its access control work into the arena of network file storage. Their approach calls for deploying the NSA's security architecture so organizations can ensure that machine intruders don't hijack programs to execute malicious tasks.

Fed Networks Increasingly Under Siege
Federal Times
Last year, federal agencies reported more than 5,600 cases of computer attacks, intrusions, probes and plantings of malicious code from unseen enemies around the world. That’s up 56 percent from the previous year and up 80 percent from two years ago, according to a new report by the Office of Management and Budget.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Friday, March 07, 2008  |  10:26 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Friday, March 7, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Washington Prepares for Cyber War Games
The Washington Post
"Cyber Storm II," the largest-ever exercise designed to evaluate the mettle of IT experts and incident response teams from 18 federal agencies, is set for next week in Washington. Escalating scenarios will test for weaknesses in the response methods of the companies and agencies.

Tech Leaders in Massachusetts Scramble to Make Hires
NetworkWorld
According to a state official, 30 percent of the IT professionals in the commonwealth plan to retire within the next five years. The dwindling number of computer science majors -- even at schools like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- is compounding the problem.

RFID Encryption Flawed in Smart Cards, Researchers Claim
NetworkWorld
Recent media attention given to University of Virginia research that showed with just $1,000 of technology RFID encrypted cards could be cracked has caused concern in Boston, where the subway system uses the technology for its CharlieCard.

U.S. Worried That High H-1B Demand May Tempt Some to 'Game' Visa Lottery
ComputerWorld
The U.S. is concerned that some companies, desperate to get an H-1B visa, may try to "game" the random visa lottery selection process to improve their odds. To prevent that sort of interference, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service is considering regulations that would penalize any company that attempts to seek an unfair advantage for its visa petitions in the selection lottery.

Who Needs IT Experts? Workers Take Control
InformationWeek
Describing the practice as "consumerization," industry observers say savvy workers frustrated with their on-the-job computer tools are not waiting around for IT to help them, but instead pulling what they need right off the Web.

Pa. County Switches from Touch-Screen to Optical Scan E-voting Machines
ComputerWorld
The Lackawanna County, Pa., board of commissioners decided to use optical scan voting machines instead of touch-screen machines not because concerns about the controversial touch screens, but because they couldn't resolve legal concerns with the Texas company that manufactures the touch-screen machines.

What Will a Recession Mean for IT Outsourcing?
eWeek
While it seems clear the U.S. has a rough economic road ahead of it in 2008, observers have mixed views about what this might mean for outsourcing. Some argue that a depressed U.S. economic climate will make the cost savings of offshoring less dramatic, which could save jobs that were otherwise at risk of being sent.

Technologists Present Policy Recommendations to Congress
Government Technology
Chief technology officers from the world's leading computer software and hardware companies have sent a letter to U.S. House and Senate leaders requesting their support of several pending policy measures, including full funding of important high-tech initiatives in the President's FY 09 budget.

DHS Tests Northern Border Security
Federal Computer Week
While the Homeland Security Department prepares a prototype solution for protecting the northern border, new technologies already are being tested in the field, according to a 20-page report from the department’s Customs and Border Protection directorate.

Arizona Legislators Push for Transparency on Budget, Spending
The Arizona Republic
A new resolution calls for a Web site maintained by the state treasurer and the treasurers of each county, city and town to be updated monthly with details of all spending and revenue, down to whether payments were made with cash, check or debit card. The databases would have to be available by July 2010.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, March 06, 2008  |  02:03 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, March 6, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


IT Looks for Online Video to Boost Corporate Training, Collaboration, Marketing
ComputerWorld
While a number of companies struggle to keep employees from surfing sites like YouTube during business hours, others have embraced online video as a means of training employees and disseminating information both internally and to the general public.

Homemade Robot Drives Away Drug Dealers
InformationWeek
The 'Bum Bot,' a robot pieced together from junked motorized scooters and some other odds and ends by engineer and tavern owner Rufus Terrill, has been chasing drug dealers away from an Atlanta neighborhood with a high-powered water gun.

Law Enforcement Creating Vast Data Network
The Washington Post
Several thousand law enforcement agencies are creating the foundation of a domestic intelligence system through computer networks that analyze vast amounts of police information to fight crime and root out terror plots.

Optical Scan Voting Draws Few Complaints in Ohio
Government Computer News
More than 400,000 voters went to the polls yesterday in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, using a new optical-scan system that appears to have worked with no more than the usual number of complaints in an election day plagued by foul weather and a closely contested race.

U.S. Tech Leadership Seen as Wavering
CIO Insight
American CIOs would rather be followers than leaders when it comes to adopting new technology. Only 6 percent of American CIOs surveyed responded that they wanted to be leaders in adopting new technologies vs. 15 percent among European and 19 percent among Chinese IT leaders, according to a survey of 500 global CIOs conducted late last year.

DOD CIO: Network Configuration, Scanning Softened Cyberattack Blow
Federal Computer Week
Dennis Clem, chief information officer at the Pentagon and the Office of the Secretary of Defense, explained how his network's configuration helped lessen the impact of a cyberattack last June.

Tech Companies Fight Md. Sales Tax
WashingtonTechnology
The Maryland information technology community is fighting hard against a new sales tax requiring companies to pay a 6 percent tax on the sale of computer services scheduled to go into effect July 1. Though the state legislature passed the measure in November, even state comptroller Peter Franchot thinks its a bad idea.

Who Should Bear the Cost of Tomorrow's Broadband?
InfoWorld
A panel of industry executives and analysts discussed who should foot the bill for the mega-sized data pipes that will be necessary for the predicted increase in data expected over the next several years.

Colorado Voting Bill Advances Despite Opposition
Rocky Mountain News
A paper-voting proposal cleared its first legislative hurdle Wednesday, despite stiff opposition from county clerks and Secretary of State Mike Coffman. The bill calls for voters statewide to cast paper ballots at polling places but also would allow those who ask to use electronic voting machines.

South Carolina Legislators Seeking Real ID Solution
Spartanburg Herald-Journal
As South Carolina officials debate whether to ask the Department of Homeland Security for more time to prepare for the Real ID act, residents are wondering if they'll be able to board airplanes without their passports in the next few months.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Monday, March 03, 2008  |  11:38 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Monday, March 3, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Government Records Incorrectly Kill off Thousands, and There’s No Easy Fix
MSNBC
Tens of thousands of living, breathing Americans have wrongly been declared dead by the Social Security Administration, causing their tax returns to be rejected and banks and credit cards to close their accounts, among other things.

Identity Management Critical for Security, Government IT Shops Say
NetworkWorld
A survey of 474 government IT professionals conducted by public-opinion research firm Pursuant found a majority of government IT organizations say identity management is very important to securing their networks and will become even more so over the next five years, but that funding to keep pace is a major impediment to growth.

Cyber Storm II Stirring for Governments
Federal Computer Week
The Department of Homeland Security is getting ready to lead foreign governments, corporations, states and federal agencies in a weeklong simulation designed to better prepare the players for cyberattacks. The event will focus on participants' abilities to respond to cyberattacks on information technology, communications, chemical and transportation infrastructure.

FTC Data: Telcos, Banks are Top Targets for ID Theft
CSO Online
Compromised accounts within just 25 companies account for nearly half of the identity theft complaints filed with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, according to recently released FTC data compiled by the University of California, Berkeley.

Red-Light Cameras: Safety Tool or Moneymaker?
The Daily Herald
Debate has cropped up around red-light cameras as towns across Illinois continue to contract the devices. Officials stress the goal of the electronic eyes is to modify driving behavior and reduce accidents, while critics say it's all about municipalities eyeing dollar signs.

Delegate's Obsession a Benefit to the Web
The Baltimore Sun
Maryland Del. Curtis S. Anderson obsessively creates profiles of his fellow state legislators for the Internet encyclopedia Wikipedia, garnering the bemusement of his colleagues in Annapolis.

Company Blames Poll Workers for Errors in Jersey Primary
The Star-Ledger
Sequoia Voting Systems, the manufacturer of New Jersey's voting machines, blamed poll workers yesterday for the errors discovered in the presidential primary results, claiming poll workers pushed the wrong buttons on the control panels causing the machines to report errors in the voter turnout.

SC: The Ultimate Online Experience? School
The Post and Courier
South Carolina Connections Academy, an Internet-based charter school, will enroll 500 students in its online kindergarten through 12th-grade program. The state's first virtual charter school, it will require students to meet all of South Carolina's standards and to take the same standardized tests.

Cyberspace Central to the New Art of War
The Washington Post
Testimony before the Strategic Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee last week centered on the need for preparedness for warfare conducted in space and cyberspace. Gen. Kevin P. Chilton, head of U.S. Strategic Command, highlighted U.S. Armed Forces efforts already geared toward protecting U.S. interests in cyberspace.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Friday, February 29, 2008  |  04:31 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Friday, Feb. 29, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender

ITIL Adoption Increases in U.S., Proficiency Still Lacking
NetworkWorld
A survey of CIOs across five contients showed the number of U.S. CIOs using ITIL and other best practice frameworks is gaining on the global adoption rate, but less than 10 percent of those polled in the U.S. consider themselves "true practictioners."

RFID May Track, Safeguard Global Blood Supply
ComputerWorld
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison are hoping to use radio-frequency identification technology to create a way to better track blood supplies around the world -- a practice that could lead to better handling and fewer instances of patients receiving the wrong blood.

Violating Internet, E-Mail Policy Will Get You Fired
ComputerWorld
A study found more than a quarter of companies have fired employees for violating company e-mail and Internet policies. While most employees terminated workers for accessing pornography or other inappropriate content, as many as 34 percent of managers in the study said they let go of workers for excessive personal use of the Internet.

Officials Split on Viability of Border-Fence Project
The New York Times
Federal officials can not seem to agree on the effectiveness and functionality of the Department of Homeland Security's virtual fence test on the border between Arizona and Mexico.

Google Sites Challenges CIO's Authority
CIO Insight
With the launch of Google Sites, Web-accessible collaborative software that promises to ease the sharing of data, CIOs will lose some of their control over what applications are being used in their companies.

FAR Council Issues Final Security Configuration Rule
Federal Computer Week
The Federal Acquisition Regulations Council issued its final rule, stating contracting officers must include the requirements to use the Federal Desktop Core Configuration for Microsoft Windows XP and Vista in all applicable procurements.

Malicious E-mails Spoof DOJ Address
Government Computer News
A trickle of phony e-mails purporting to be from the Justice Department and carrying apparently malicious attachments has been found by security researchers from MX Logic, an anti-spam company.

Lawmakers Criticize Security Clearance Practices
WashingtonTechnology
Lawmakers at a House Intelligence Committee hearing said many potentially good candidates may have their clearance applications rejected because of outdated policies. However, officials at OMB and and OPM said they've made improvements in the efficiency of the process.

High Voter Turnout Prompts Resource Concerns for Nov.
USA Today
Record turnout in this year's presidential primaries has election officials worried about possible shortages of machines, ballots and poll workers in November.

Florida Touch-Screen Voting Machines to be Recycled or Resold
St. Petersburg Times
A Tampa company will recycle or resell most of the 29,000 touch-screen voting machines in Florida after less than six years of use, the secretary of state said Thursday.


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Got Cisco? Are you Sure?
By Jill R. Aitoro | Friday, February 29, 2008  |  07:59 AM

The Federal Bureau of Investigation reported today more than 400 seizures of counterfeit Cisco equipment and labels worth more than $76 million filtering into the United States from China.

The effort, which has been ongoing since 2005, is being driven by DHS and FBI. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the Customs and Border Protection conducted 28 investigations and managed six indictments and four felony convictions, with more than 74,000 fakes seized, while the FBI’s portion of the initiative, dubbed Operation Cisco Raider, resulted in 36 search warrants with approximately 3,500 counterfeit network components identified, and a total of 10 convictions.

So why is government focusing on Cisco? Because the counterfeiters do. They go where the money is, and in terms of networking gear, which many regard as commodity items that can be easily copied, no manufacturer rakes in more revenue than Cisco. It’s the same reason that hackers focus on Microsoft: Market saturation.

The government is among the most profitable markets for Cisco. That makes federal agencies as susceptible as any to getting duped. Check out what happened to the Navy in 2004 for example, when counterfeit Cisco switches landed in one of its secure facilities. (You can read the whole sordid story at GovernmentVAR.com). One contractor involved was recently found liable, and now the circumstances are being investigated by the Navy’s Acquisition Integrity Office.

The lesson learned? Check those serial numbers.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, February 28, 2008  |  10:47 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, Feb. 28, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Security Skills of IT Workforce Lacking, Survey Finds
NetworkWorld
While nearly three-fourths of 3,500 technology professionals polled in a recent survey identified security, firewall and data privacy as the IT skills most important to their organization today, only 57 percent said they believed their IT employees were proficient in such skills.


Can IT Alleviate the Pain of Those Miserable Commutes?
ComputerWorld
Between trains that seem incapable of running on schedule and bumper-to-bumper traffic, there aren't many people who can claim to love to commute. But government and grassroots efforts are attempting to make the experience more tolerable. For example, The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority recently began a pilot Wi-Fi program on its Worcester line.


Researchers Transmit Optical Data At 16.4 Tbps
InformationWeek
Alcatel-Lucent researchers at the Bell Labs in Villarceaux, France, announced Wednesday their successful transmission of 16.4 Tbps of optical data over 2,550 km. New technologies they used in their test may pave the way for 100 Gbps transmissions.


For Sale: Passwords To Fortune 500's Servers
InformationWeek
More than 8,700 FTP login names and passwords are being sold online through a sort of eBay for stolen data, a security company revealed this week. Some of the FTP credentials grant access to Fortune 500 Company servers, another set to a state court Web site, according to Finjan, the computer security company in Israel that made the discovery.


Tech Problems Delay ‘Virtual Fence’ on Border
The Washington Post
Technical problems discovered in a 28-mile pilot project have led the Bush administration to scale back plans to quickly build a "virtual fence" along the U.S.-Mexico border. Authorities confirmed that Project 28, the initial deployment of the Secure Border Initiative network, did not work as planned or meet the needs of the U.S. Border Patrol.


Pass Card Contract Talks Stall
Government Computer News
The State Department and General Dynamics, the leading company in the vendor team the government originally chose to carry out critical aspects of the Pass Card program, have "reached an impasse" in talks about how to carry out the job. Pass Cards are intended to serve as cheaper alternatives to passports for use by citizens re-entering the country via land ports.


Concerns Rising About Requiring a Paper-Ballot Election in Colorado
The Denver Post
Despite sponsorship of party leaders in both chambers, a handful of legislators have reservations about Colorado moving to paper ballots for the upcoming election. One legislator wondered why counties can't be allowed wide use of their electronic voting terminals, all of which have now been recertified.


China Still Years From Competing Against U.S. IT
eWeek
China is closing the technology gap with the U.S. every year, but it will be many years before it challenges the U.S. for dominance of the technology market, according to Fred Hu, co-head of Investment Banking for China at Goldman Sachs.


Governor Promotes Connecticut's Long-Term Care Web Site
Government Technology
Recognizing a growing need to provide easier access to comprehensive information on long-term care for people of all ages, Connecticut has launched a Web site that, as Gov. M. Jodi Rell said, "aims to help improve the lives of people needing long-term care now and to help those who will need it in the future -- meaning most of us -- plan ahead."


Google Unveils Low-Cost Collaboration Platform
Government Computer News
Google Sites is intended to be a low-cost alternative to Microsoft SharePoint and other commercial collaboration packages. Unlike other collaboration packages, Google's offering should not require IT staffs to provide significant training and maintenance.


Army Recognizes Conventional Warfare a Thing of the Past
WashingtonTechnology
In a climate of insurgencies and unstable peace, the Army must be more nimble. The Army Capabilities Integration Center hopes to chart the course for creating forces capable of using technology to handle modern conflicts.


Healthcare Organizations See Cyberattacks as Growing Threat
InfoWorld
Healthcare organizations feel under increasing attack from the Internet, while security incidents involving insiders and disappearing laptops with sensitive data are piling up. On top of that, there's now the prospect of a surprise audit from the federal government agency in charge of overseeing the HIPAA security and privacy rules.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Wednesday, February 27, 2008  |  11:54 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


IT Services Fall Short of Greatness, CIOs Say
NetworkWorld
In a January survey conducted by Omniboss, nearly 80 percent of 125 CIOs and senior IT directors polled said a lack of senior representation at the board level had a direct impact on their ability to deliver great -- rather than just good -- IT services.

'Cold Boot' Encryption Hack Unlikely, Says Microsoft
ComputerWorld
In light of research conducted by Princeton University showing cooling down a computer's memory offers thieves a larger window of time in which to steal data, a Microsoft product manager said the vulnerability can be minimized by changing some settings in Windows.

Bush's Double-Edged Cyber-Security Plan
Forbes
To keep cyber-spies and hackers away from sensitive government information, the Bush administration may have to do some spying on the private sector, such as military contractors, according to former federal employees.

Healthcare CIOs Worry About Medicare Cuts Hurting IT Budgets ComputerWorld
Since President Bush proposed reductions in federal healthcare programs, healthcare IT executives worry hospitals will fear pressue to make cuts in programs creating electronic medical record systems and computerized orders that can reduce medical errors.

FBI Says To Ignore E-mail Death Threats
InformationWeek
The FBI says emails purportedly from a hired assassin requiring recipients to pay $20,000 or face death are a hoax. While jaded Internet veterans might scoff that anyone would take such a threat seriously, the scheme appears more credible than it might otherwise because of its use of personal information to make the message more intimidating.

D.C. Special-Ed Getting New Computer System, Staff
The Washington Post
D.C. State Superintendent of Education Deborah A. Gist announced the school system plans to purchase a computer system designed to keep track of special education students' academic life, replacing several systems plagued by bad data and an inability to communicate with one another.

Bill Shifts Votes to Paper Ballots in Colorado
The Denver Post
A bill filed on Tuesday sponsored by the majority and minority leaders in both chambers calls for a return to paper ballots in Colorado. While admitting it's low-tech, one state senator said, "But low-tech means it's less likely there will be computer problems." The bill also has Gov. Bill Ritter's backing.

Wireless Broadband Mesh Network Test Launched in San Carlos, Calif.
Government Technology
Convad Communications Inc. Wireless Unit will deploy a wireless broadband test network in San Carlos, Calif., as part of the 'Concept City' phase of Wireless Silicon Valley. Convad, which already serves business customers in the San Carlos area, will layer a new wireless broadband mesh capability onto its existing fixed wireless broadband service.

Los Angeles County to Count Flawed 'Double Bubble' Ballots
San Diego Union-Tribune
The Los Angeles County Registrar's office will try to count about 50,000 improperly marked nonpartisan ballots from this month's presidential primary election. The ballots of Independent voters who did fill in a bubble for both the party they were voting for and the candidate they were supporting could not be read by the scanning machines.

Tech Group: Increase US Gov't Research Funding
InfoWorld
The Technology CEO Council sent a letter to congressional leaders Monday, urging congress to keep the promises it made in the America Competes Act of 2007, legislation that focuses on improving U.S. science and technology programs. Three federal agencies combined fiscal 2008 budgets were $918 million short of targets promised in the legislation.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Tuesday, February 26, 2008  |  11:31 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Microsoft's Drive for Interoperability Means More Bugs, for Now
ComputerWorld
Security researchers said Microsoft's decision last week to let everyone examine its software secrets means vulnerabilities and exploits will almost certainly climb in the short term. Those same researchers said this move should translate into better security for everyone in the long run.


Gartner: Global RFID Market to Top $1.2B This Year
ComputerWorld
Gartner Inc. has released a report predicting worldwide revenue for radio frequency identification technology will eclipse $1.2 billion this year, marking an almost 31 percent increase over last year.


New York City to Help Doctors Track Patients’ Records Electronically
The New York Times
In what New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said is just the beginning of an effort to provide better care to people before they get sick, New York City is ready to equip doctors with computer software that can track patients’ medical records. Among other features, the new system will share data with other doctors and provide information about the current best practices for treating illnesses.


Demand for Hybrid Driver's Licenses High in Washington State
Federal Computer Week
The Enhanced Drivers License program, started by Washington state in conjunction with the Homeland Security Department, has issued more than 2,000 new hybrid drivers license-passport cards since it began issuing them Jan. 22. The identification cards enable Washington State residents to travel freely across the U.S. land border with Canada. They are being marketed as a low-cost alternative to passports.


E-Vote: Judge Strikes Down Union County, Ohio, Voting Machine Directive Challenge
Government Technology
Franklin County Common Pleas Court Judge Eric Brown, in a 25-page decision, struck down a county's challenge to Ohio Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner's Jan. 2, 2008 directive requiring backup paper ballots by boards of elections using touch-screen voting machines in the March 4 presidential primary election.


At NIH Center, Software Manages Pneumatic Delivery
Government Computer News
Unable to mail or allot the manpower to move thousands of blood products, biological samples, medications and medical devices every day between patient care units and the pharmacy, laboratories and other departments at its Clinical Research Center, NIH employs a system of pneumatic tubes with proprietary software that schedules and routes the carriers.


Service-Oriented Architecture Spending Up Despite Unclear Benefits
InfoWorld
A new research report from analyst firm AMR Research cites The number of companies investing in service-oriented architecture has doubled over the past year in every part of the world, with a typical annual spend of nearly $1.4 million. However, the AMR survey found that most companies don’t really know why they are investing in SOA, which Findley said makes long-term commitment iffy.


Intelligence Sharing Still Lacking
The Wall Street Journal
The Department of Homeland Security is stumbling in its efforts to coordinate the gathering and sharing of domestic intelligence with state and local officials, one of its core responsibilities, according to an internal report.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Monday, February 25, 2008  |  10:44 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Monday, Feb. 25, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


The Road To Making Business Intelligence Available To Everyone
InformationWeek
For BI to be used by more employees and by employees in a wider range of job types within a company, several roads must converge, and IT professionals must work with businesses more closely to make that happen.

The Challenges of Retrofitting PCs with a Standard Configuration
Government Computer News
While some agencies have made significant progress complying with the Federal Desktop Core Configuration, others -- like the Agriculture Department, where field employees are given administrative rights to their laptops -- are experiencing considerable challenges to quickly complying with the new security rules.

Electronic Recyclers International CEO Explains 'All Things eWaste'
Government Technology
VideoJug, an online video encyclopedia of life that features professionally made 'how-to' and expert advice clips, is featuring chairman and CEO Of Electronic Recyclers International John S. Shegerian in a series of clips on electronic waste, why it is an environmental hazard and how to properly dispose of it.

New Funding to Protect Cyberassets Catches Industry Attention
WashingtonTechnology
Given the current attention the public is paying to cyber espionage and attacks, cybersecurity contractors are expecting a fresh wave of federal business opportunities. However, exact details on opportunities are hard to pin down.

USPTO Reveals Plans for 2008 IT Procurements
Federal Computer Week
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office plans to issue four requests for proposals for five competitive IT procurements, covering systems and network engineering, database management and help desk support. The potential contracts would replace existing contracts.

The Common Cold of IT Security
Government Computer News
Like the common cold, IT experts find they can treat buffer overflows, but can't cure them. A stack buffer overflow is one of the oldest tricks used by hackers to take control of a computer. When a malicious program writes excess data to an address on the call stack of an application with a fixed length buffer, the corrupted stack can make the application run improperly.

Airlines Shift to E-Ticket Only Starting June 1
The Washington Post
The International Air Transport Association, a trade group representing 240 airlines and accounts for 94 percent of air traffic, announced its members will use only electronic tickets beginning June 1. Emphasizing the bottom line, the IATA spokesman noted how much cheaper e-tickets are to produce than paper tickets. The switch will save the industry $3 billion a year.

Idaho Lawmakers Consider 'Digital Repository' for Documents
The Idaho Statesman
Idaho officials seeks to replace an ineffective, costly and often ignored law requiring 20 copies of each state document be sent to libraries around the state. As so many state documents exist only in digital format, under the new system, one electronic copy of every state publication would go to the state Commission of Libraries to be preserved in the new digital library.

Colorado Airline Passengers Eye Fast Lane
The Daily Camera
The Clear security fast pass has been in use at the Denver International Airport since January. Cardholders bypass the unpredictable waits at airport security stations by registering personal information with the Transportation Security Administration. Thus far, travelers using the service have been pleased with the guaranteed no more than four minutes of waiting at airport security.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Friday, February 22, 2008  |  11:28 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Friday, Feb. 22, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


A Problem IT Can't Fix: Getting Students, Faculty to Sign Up for Campus Alerts
ComputerWorld
In a random check of five schools in the United States, participation rates range from about 31 percent at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), to about 50 percent at New York University and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Boston College and Florida State University logged in with much higher participation rates -- about 68 percent and 85 percent, respectively.

Study: More U.S. Broadband has $134 Billion Economic Impact
NetworkWorld
A 7 percent increase in broadband adoption would create 2.4 million U.S. jobs, would save $662 million in health-care costs and $6.4 billion in vehicle mileage, among other savings.

Researchers Find Hard Drive Encryption's Achilles heel
ComputerWorld
Researchers at Princeton University have discovered a way to steal the hard drive encryption key used by products such as Windows Vista's BitLocker or Apple's FileVault. With that key, hackers could get access to all of the data stored on an encrypted hard drive.

Server Shipments Up Despite Fears of Economic Slowdown
InformationWeek
Worldwide server shipments climbed 11 percent in the fourth quarter of last year and revenue was up nearly 3 percent, despite fears of an economic slowdown, a market research firm said Thursday. There was no change in the rankings of the top vendors.

Colorado: Flap Over Electronic Voting Heats Up
Rocky Mountain News
The cloud over Colorado's electronic voting and tallying machines grew darker Thursday, as voting activists accused Secretary of State Mike Coffman of violating state law during his review of the equipment.

Army to Lift Ban on Public Access to Online Library
Federal Computer Week
Shortly after sealing off public access to the Web-based Reimer Digital Library, the Army has reversed its decision, according to the Federation of American Scientists.

FAA Sets Cybersecurity Center Buildup
Government Computer News
The Transportation Department's Federal Aviation Administration is preparing to recompete Northop Grumman's existing contract to operate the agency's IT security management center, which helps safeguard systems across the department. FAA plans to expand and improve the center so it will be able to provide IT security services to agencies outside the department.

State Workers in Ohio Back to 8-to-5
The Columbus Dispatch
Reversing a 1990 downtown traffic-congestion relief plan, Ohio's new personnel policy requires most state employees to work 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, with an hour for lunch, unless there is a job-related reason for a different schedule.

Politcal Opposites in PA Join to Fight Real ID
The Morning Call
One of the General Assembly's most conservative members and one of its most liberal have teamed up in a bid to block a federal program they say would put the personal privacy of millions of Americans at risk by creating a national identity card.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, February 21, 2008  |  11:43 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, Feb. 21, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Privacy Group Sounds Alarms Over Personal Health Records Systems
ComputerWorld
In some cases, people whose health care information is stored in online personal health records (PHR) systems may be exposed to serious data privacy risks, according to a warning issued by a privacy advocacy group. That's because not all PHR systems are covered by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the World Privacy Forum said in a 16-page report released Wednesday.

Malware's New Mantra: Think Globally, Steal Locally
InformationWeek
The era of global malware, characterized by threats like Blaster and MyDoom, is drawing to a close. Malware authors have taken to designing malicious code for local markets. A report that McAfee plans to release on Thursday describes how malware creation over the past few years has transformed from a mass market endeavor into a regional one.

March Rollout for FBI’s Data Sharing System
Government Computer News
The FBI's Criminal Justice Information Service (CJIS) plans to launch the first increment of its National Data Exchange (N-Dex) law enforcement information sharing system March 19, according to program manager Kevin Reid.

Responders, Managers Team to Control IT Incidents
Federal Times
They may be government information technology managers, but they talk like members of a SWAT team. Information security incident response teams — quick responders who stomp information technology emergencies in their tracks, dissect the attacks and blockade future badness — are in high demand these days.

Candidates Not Tuned in to Cyberthreats to Campaigns
Government Computer News
Using the Internet in an election campaign is not a new idea, but would-be presidential candidates have embraced the concept in this election cycle like never before. But along with the newfound power of the Internet comes equally significant threats, said Oliver Friedrichs, director of emerging technology at Symantec Security Response.

D.C. Cameras Have Cut Violence, Study Says
The Washington Post
The use of surveillance cameras by D.C. police has lowered violence in some areas of the city and helped to identify suspects and solve crimes, police say in a report released this week. But some remain skeptical, and a council member is questioning whether the $4 million supply of cameras merely shifts crime away from the lenses.

DOD to Test System to Improve Intergovernmental Transactions
Federal Computer Week
The Defense Department’s Business Transformation Agency (BTA) will test a better way to transfer funds with other agencies in the next seven months. BTA Director David Fisher said Feb. 19 that after a successful internal DOD pilot program last year, officials want to expand the intergovernmental transfers trial with nonmilitary agencies.

Education Needed on Importance of Broadband to Rural Areas
Arkansas News Bureau
Enticing private companies to invest in extending expensive broadband Internet infrastructure into rural areas of the state may not require government incentives, but instead the education of Arkansans, industry officials said Wednesday. "The reason people don't have a demand for broadband primarily is because they don't understand what broadband can do for them," Arkansas Broadband Advisory Council Chairman James Winningham told members of a legislative committee on advanced communications and information technology.

Security Issue Tied to Chinese Investor Remains Unresolved
The Boston Globe
Bain Capital Partners' $2.2 billion deal for 3Com Corp. is on the ropes after Bain and 3Com failed to satisfy a federal agency that the transaction wouldn't harm national security. The deal, proposed in September, would take 3Com private and give a 16 percent stake in the company to Huawei Technologies, a company with close ties to the Chinese military.

Federal Government Falling Short on Cybercrime
SearchSecurity
The federal government is falling farther and farther behind its fight against cybercrime and, despite an increase in the amount of resources being allocated to address the problem, it will continue to struggle without a lot of help from law enforcement agencies at the state, local and international levels, current and former government security officials say.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Wednesday, February 20, 2008  |  09:51 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender

Most Federal Workers Can Work From Home, But Don't
InformationWeek
If all federal employees eligible for full-time telework did work from home, the employees could save a total of $13.9 billion on commuting costs and stop 21.5 billion pounds of pollutants from entering the environment each year, according to a recent study. However, many employees are unaware of their federal agencies' telework policies, and even fewer know if they are eligible to work from home.

Panel: Securing Cyberspace Among Top Technological Challenges of 21st Century
NetworkWorld
A National Academy of Engineering panel of big thinkers, including Google co-founder Larry Page, has identified 14 top technological challenges for this century and securing cyberspace is among them.

Firm Gets U.S. Nod for Quick Passenger Data Checks
C-Net News
A company owned by international airlines on Wednesday said it has won approval from the United States for a system providing passenger details to U.S. border authorities almost instantaneously.

IT Career Paths You Never Dreamed Of
ComputerWorld
Software developers eager to advance should consider looking for product architect roles. Network and security administrators may want to start looking for positions as electronic privacy specialists. If business analytics is your area of expertise, your next promotion might be to the job of information architect. Just don't expect to be part of an IT department.

Sabotage Eyed As Possible Cause Of Undersea Cable Cuts
InformationWeek
Officials refuse to rule out sabotage but believe that fishing nets or ship anchors are the likely cause of the damage to the five undersea telecommunications cables.

New Computers Delaying Food-Stamp Applications
Austin American-Statesman
New state data show that only 48 percent of Texas food stamp applications processed using the updated computer system, known as TIERS, are completed within the 30 days the federal government requires. State officials say one of the problems is there aren't enough workers trained in the new system.

NIST Releases Results of Latest Fingerprint-Matching Tests
Government Computer News
Only one of five biometric smart-card vendors participating in a federal test of on-card fingerprint matching managed to meet the accuracy standards set for the federal Personal Identity Verification card, according to the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

DARPA Procurement Plan Shows Pentagon's IT Research Priorities
Government Computer News
The Pentagon seeks to fund information technology research projects in technology arenas that reflect the military's emerging warfare challenges, especially those flowing from combat in South Asia and conflict in cyberspace, as outlined in a recent procurement plan.

Survey: IT Spending Set for Slowdown in Q2
InfoWorld
Twenty-three percent of respondents to a ChangeWave Research study said their companies will reduce or halt IT spending in the second quarter of this year, results that underscore recent concerns about a U.S. recession. Only 15 percent of respondents said spending would increase in the second quarter, a nine-point drop from the company's previous survey in November.

Most States Give Green Light to Tamper-Proof IDs
USA Today
Forty-four states are moving ahead to comply with a law requiring more secure driver's licenses, according to the Department of Homeland Security — despite privacy concerns and worry that the new documents will be too expensive.


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Obama's CTO Moves to Private Sector
By Jill R. Aitoro | Tuesday, February 19, 2008  |  03:41 PM

Barack Obama’s presidential campaign is out a chief technology officer. Just before Super Tuesday, Kevin Malover reportedly joined private equity firm GTCR Golder Rauner in Chicago as chief information officer, according to Investment Dealers Digest.

Prior to joining the campaign trail, Malover helped with travel site Orbitz.com and an online real estate company he cofounded. He can be credited for helping to craft Obama’s strategic use of text messaging and social networking sites such as MySpace.com and Facebook.com, and developing an interactive web site that allows Obama followers to find events and volunteer opportunities, register to vote, and call citizens in contested states to drum up support. The Web site's ability to reach out to voters via mass emails has been mentioned as one of the reasons for Obama's success this campaign season. At the time this blog was written, the call function was not available due to “overwhelmed” servers. Perhaps the campaign is already feeling the effects of Malover’s departure?

No word about a replacement CTO has come from Obama's camp.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Tuesday, February 19, 2008  |  10:29 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Court Orders Whistle-Blower Site Offline in U.S.
ComputerWorld
A California district court has shut down a controversial Web site in the United States that allows whistle blowers to post corporate and government documents online anonymously.

Study Finds Outsourcing Delivers ROI, But Not Innovation
InformationWeek
Too many businesses take a short-sighted view of their outsourcing contracts, concludes Deloitte. The consulting firm found that while most business executives it surveyed are satisfied with the cost savings they get from outsourcing, most said outsourcing relationships had not led to important innovations or transformations.

Tempe, Ariz., CIO Faces Wi-Fi Reality Check
ComputerWorld
Dave Heck, CIO for Tempe, Ariz., remembers when municipal Wi-Fi advocates talked four years ago about wireless networks as shining beacons that would bring the Internet to the masses. Today, in Tempe, that optimism is nearly gone. Tempe's city-wide Wi-Fi system went live in 2006, offering some 900 access points installed on city-owned poles; now, it's basically dead.

Washington State Reps. Pass Ban On RFID Skimming
InformationWeek
The Washington State House of Representatives on Friday passed a bill that would make it a felony to steal information from RFID cards. The bill would make it a class C felony to intentionally skim information from RFID-enabled identity cards for fraud or identity theft. The legislation, introduced by State Rep. Jeff Morris, provides exemptions for health care givers and emergency responders.

States Bolster FBI Gun Database
USA Today
More states are turning over records to a federal database of mentally ill people barred from owning guns, nearly tripling the number in the system since the massacre at Virginia Tech last spring, the FBI says.

D.C. Testing Gizmo to Ferret Out Meter Feeders
The Washington Post
Beware, all you parking meter feeders and restricted zone overtimers. The swift and unblinking eye of the mobile parking camera might be coming your way. The District's Department of Public Works is evaluating several systems that would enable parking officers to swing quickly through a neighborhood with a license plate reader or similar technology to catch violators.

Stolen Hardware Held DWP Employees' Personal Information
Los Angeles Times
Computer equipment containing the private financial data of every employee of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power was stolen earlier this week, prompting the utility to pay for a credit monitoring service for each of its 8,275 workers.

NOAA’s Sensor-Laden, Web-Accessible System Makes Ports into Safer Havens
Government Computer News
PORTS, the Physical Oceanographic Real-Time System program, provides real-time oceanographic and meteorological data that can make the difference between smooth sailing and running aground or crashing into a bridge. With the addition in December of the Port of Mobile, Ala., PORTS is operating at 14 locations nationwide with more additions planned.

SB81 Requires E-Verify Checking for Workers
Desert Morning News
Utah's senators today are scheduled consider a key question: should the federal Internet-based E-Verify system be required for public employers and those they contract with. While supporters of that system say it does weed out most phony work documents, critics say the system isn't perfect and workers who are incorrectly marked as no-matches have the burden of proving their work eligibility.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Friday, February 15, 2008  |  10:41 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Friday, Feb. 15, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Even Spies Embrace China's Free Market
The Washington Post
The case of Lan Lee and Yuefei Ge, who pleaded not guilty in October to charges of theft of trade secrets and the more serious charge of economic espionage to benefit a foreign government, is one of more than a dozen involving the alleged sale or attempted sale of purloined technology to China that are making their way through U.S. courts this year.


White House E-Discovery Squeeze Puts E-Mail Backup in Focus
ComputerWorld
As the White House contends with a federal judge's order to prepare a discovery plan amid a legal skirmish about missing e-mail, storage experts say businesses should move to improve backup and e-mail archiving policies to avoid similar legal problems.


Computer Users Expect More Mac Attacks
InformationWeek
Computer users are becoming increasingly pessimistic about the Mac's ability to sustain its mostly malware-free existence. Sophos, a computer security company, surveyed 355 computer users, asking them whether they believed Apple's Macintosh computers will be targeted more frequently by malware in the future. It found that 93 percent expected an increase in malware threats.


New Database Will Track Guns Used in Crimes in New York
The New York Sun
New York City is building a new database to track guns used in crimes, and it intends to share the information with police departments up and down the East Coast in an effort to crack down on illegal gun trafficking.


D.C. Metro Looking to Install Flat-Screen Monitors
The Washington Post
Metro plans to install large flat-screen video monitors to carry system information and advertising in rail cars, train stations, buses and bus shelters in an effort to improve customer communication and earn much-needed revenue, officials said yesterday.


NYC Unveils Citywide Performance Reporting System
Government Technology
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg today unveiled the New York Citywide Performance Reporting (CPR) system, which he announced in the State of the City, a performance measurement tool that will help make the workings of government transparent to all citizens and ensure that City agencies are accountable for their performance.


Execs Value Outsourcing but Problems Linger
CIO Insight
A strikingly high number of executives say their IT outsourcing projects met their return-on-investment goals, casting a positive light on one of IT’s more complex areas, a new study reveals. But despite the positive results, the dark side of outsourcing persists, with many executives wishing they could go back in time.


OMB Does Not Support Bill to Update FISMA
Federal Computer Week
The Bush administration doesn't support legislation introduced late last year that would modify the Federal Information Security Management Act, an administration official testified today. Karen Evans, the OMB's administrator for e-government and information technology, told House members that current activities being undertaken by agencies are closing the performance gaps and the legislation could cause agencies some unplanned problems.


Colonial Annapolis Gets Futuristic Parking
The Baltimore Sun
An automated valet unveiled yesterday can neatly tuck up to 18 vehicles under a new building in historic Annapolis, far too few to solve the state capital's notorious parking problems. But city officials and the new building's owner hailed it as a striking innovation that is the first of its kind in Maryland and the fourth in the country.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, February 14, 2008  |  10:24 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, Feb. 14, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Eavesdropping Law is Likely to Lapse
The New York Times
Broad spying powers temporarily approved by Congress in August appear likely to lapse this week after a daylong game of chicken on Wednesday between the White House and House Democrats produced no clear resolution.


Could IP Address Plan Mean Another IPv6 Delay?
NetworkWorld
Internet policymakers are considering sweeping changes to the way they distribute IP addresses that could allow network operators to make money by transferring unused blocks of IPv4 address space to others in need. One result could be lessened incentive to move to IPv6 any time soon.


Not enough IT workers on staff, survey finds
NetworkWorld
A shortage of IT workers on staff is the top IT-related concern of C-level executives, according to new research. Close to 60 percent of 749 CEOs, CIOs and other C-level executives reported in a survey released Wednesday that an insufficient number of IT staff continues to pose a problem in their organization.


Heathrow Launches RFID Trial to Track Luggage
ComputerWorld
The U.K.'s busiest airport is starting to affix radio chips to the luggage of passengers as part of an experiment aimed at reducing lost bags. The six-month trial will involve tagging around 50,000 bags a month with RFID tags for passengers traveling or transferring on Emirates Airline between Dubai and Heathrow, said BAA, the company that runs the airport.

Net Neutrality Returns To Top Of Washington's Agenda
InformationWeek
After nearly one relatively dormant year, network neutrality is back on top of the technology agenda in Washington, as the Federal Communications Commission examined the issue and lawmakers introduced a new net neutrality bill.


Computerized Prescription Program Hoped to Curb Drug Errors
The Boston Globe
One in every 10 patients admitted to six Massachusetts community hospitals suffered serious and avoidable medication mistakes, according to a report being released today by two nonprofit groups that are urging all hospitals in the state to install a computerized prescription ordering system.


City Council Approves a Bill Requiring Residents to Recycle Electronics
The New York Times
New York City is a step closer to adopting one of the toughest electronics recycling laws in the nation, despite strong objections from manufacturers and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. The City Council on Wednesday overwhelmingly approved a bill that would impose a $100 fine on anyone who throws an old computer, printer or other electronic gadget into the trash.


Governor Urges Nebraskans to Consider E-filing Taxes
Government Technology
Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman today encouraged Nebraska taxpayers to consider using the free e-file option when reporting income taxes for tax year 2007, and announced that e-filings in 2007 increased by more than 4 percent. Of the 41 states reporting e-filing statistics, Nebraska was ranked sixth in the nation based on the percentage of e-filers for tax year 2006.


White House E-Mail Case Clears Another Hurdle
eWeek
A public advocacy group won another legal round Feb. 11 in its efforts to force the White House to reveal the whereabouts of millions of missing Bush administration e-mails. Rejecting the White House Office of Administration's contention that it is not subject to Freedom of Information Act requests, a District Court Judge ordered the Office of Administration to participate in limited discovery.


DHS' IG: Legacy IT Systems Pose a Major Challenge
Federal Computer Week
The Homeland Security Department’s ability to adequately recover its information systems in the wake of a disaster is a “major concern,” the department’s inspector general said Wednesday.


Network Operators Encouraged to 'Think Green'
InfoWorld
The environment was top of the agenda in the opening keynote session of the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, where Rob Conway, CEO of the GSM Association, characterized mobile communications as an energy-saving alternative to flying or driving. But he acknowledged the downsides, saying, "We must, as an industry, do something about reducing energy consumption, and support renewable energy and recycling."


San Francisco Gets First Look at New Voting Machines
The San Diego Union-Tribune
A demonstration of the new Sequoia Voting Systems machines on Tuesday showed how they would count both paper and electronic ballots used in the city's unusual ranked-choice elections. The Board of Supervisors also approved a settlement in which the city's former voting machine vendor agreed to pay $3.5 million over claims that the company failed to tell officials the machines were uncertified.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Wednesday, February 13, 2008  |  10:43 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender

Lockheed Secures Contract to Expand Biometric Database
The Washington Post
The FBI yesterday announced the award of a $1 billion, 10-year contract to Lockheed Martin to develop what is expected to be the world's largest crime-fighting computer database of biometric information, including fingerprints, palm prints, iris patterns and face images.


U.S. Government Plans For Increased IP Enforcement
InformationWeek
Federal agencies charged with protecting intellectual property will try to help small and medium-sized enterprises finance foreign IP registrations and evaluate assets through audits. They will also expand outreach programs to address IP issues and explain economic, safety, and health impacts from counterfeit goods.


U.S. Program to Verify Worker Status Is Growing
The New York Times
The number of businesses taking part in a voluntary program that allows them to verify electronically their newly hired employees’ legal authorization to work in the United States is soaring, the federal government said Tuesday. About 52,000 employers are now using a Web-based system, known as E-Verify, compared with 14,265 a year ago.


When a Bus Becomes a Superbus
Governing
City and county fleets all across the country are pulling into the high-tech fast lane, gaining ground on cars for commuting. The new generation of buses offers passengers benefits — not just TV but Wi-Fi and other high-tech amenities — they couldn't enjoy if they were behind the wheel of a car.


Georgia Government Tracks Down Missing Data, Virtualizes Storage
NetworkWorld
Knowing the location of your data may seem simple enough, but figuring out where data lives and, in some cases, where it has been placed inappropriately was a key part of a $400,000 project led by Puckett, the IT services manager for Georgia’s Gwinnett County government.


Senate Passes Spy Bill, Phone Immunity
InformationWeek
U.S. phone companies that took part in President Bush's warrantless domestic spying program would receive retroactive immunity from lawsuits under a bill passed overwhelmingly Tuesday by the Democratic-led Senate. But it was unclear if the Democratic-led House would also approve the measure to shield firms from potentially billions of dollars in civil damages.


High-Tech Giants Seeking Massive Tax Break
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Microsoft and a handful of other tech giants are quietly securing a state tax break that could be worth more than $1 billion through legislation forged amid corporate threats and an interstate bidding war for computer server farms that have become the backbone of the Internet.


E-Vote: Colorado to Begin Recertification of Voting Machines
Government Technology
Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter on Monday signed bipartisan legislation that will allow Secretary of State Mike Coffman to begin the review and recertification process for electronic voting machines that the secretary decertified in December.


Students in DOD-Supported Schools Share Info Through Network
Stars and Stripes
DODDS-E Net, which began as an in-house e-mail system for students to keep in touch with deployed parents has evolved into a computer network that includes student-to-student messaging, blogs and electronic homework assignments.

FAA Wants Help Becoming Cybersecurity Shared-Services Provider
Federal Computer Week
The Federal Aviation Administration wants to become a shared-services provider under the Security Line of Business initiative. In a market survey released on FedBizOpps.gov last week, FAA asked for support services for a “leading edge cybersecurity management center.”


VeriSign Moves Closer to IPv6
Government Computer News
VeriSign Inc., which operates two of the Internet’s 13 Domain Name System root servers, has upgraded the servers to enable them to handle native IPv6 traffic. VeriSign Chief Technology Officer Ken Silva called the enhancements “the next logical step in improving the availability efficiency and reliability of the core Internet infrastructure.


CRS: DHS Directorate Lacks Collaborative Spirit
Washington Technology
Industry executives find it difficult to work with the Homeland Security Department’s Science and Technology Directorate because of the agency’s lack of responsiveness, according to a new report from the Congressional Research Service.


U.S. Recession May Benefit Indian Outsourcers
InfoWorld
Close on the heels of the appreciation of the Indian rupee against the dollar, Indian outsourcing companies are grappling with a new problem -- uncertainty among U.S. companies about a recession has made these companies delay finalizing their IT budgets. If the IT budgets of U.S. customers are marginally impacted in a recession, then there is an increase in business offshore to cut costs, a Forrester analyst said.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Monday, February 11, 2008  |  10:47 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Monday, Feb. 11, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


2008 IT Spending Forecast Again Cut by Forrester
ComputerWorld
The worsening U.S. economic situation has moved analyst firm Forrester Research Inc. to lower its expectations for U.S. and global IT spending for the second time in less than two months. The company predicts that U.S. business purchases of IT goods and services will grow by 2.8 percent, down from an expected 4.6 percent growth rate that Forrester predicted in December.


Welcome to Cyberwar Country, USA
Wired
With billions of dollars in contracts and millions in local spending on the line, 15 military towns are vying to win the Cyber Command, throwing in offers of land, academic and research tie-ins, and, in one case, an $11 million building with a moat. At a time when Cold War-era commands laden with aging aircraft are shriveling, the nascent Cyber Command is universally seen as a future-proof bet for expansion, in an era etched with portents of cyberwar.


Taking Control of IPv6
Government Computer News
THE ARRIVAL of IPv6 will eventually give agencies better security, more flexible networking and a number of available IP addresses so large it can make your head hurt just trying to grasp how many there will be. But how well agencies take advantage of IPv6 will depend in large part on how well administrators manage their newfound wealth of IP address spaces, experts say.


Powerful New Antiphishing Weapon Emerges
NetworkWorld
Spoofers, spammers and phishers, beware. There’s a new gun in town, and some of the Internet’s most powerful companies -- including Yahoo, Google, PayPal and AOL -- are brandishing it in the ongoing battle against e-mail fraud.


Web 2.0: Too Good to Be True?
CIO Insight
The collaborative tools of Web 2.0 are overloading employees and killing productivity — to the tune of $588 billion a year, according to a January study by Basex, a collaboration technologies consulting firm. And that assumes knowledge workers make $21 per hour — a conservative estimate — meaning the damage could exceed a half-trillion dollars.

Abandoned Computer Servers in D.C. Explained
The Washington Post
Two D.C. Office of Tax and Revenue computer servers were abandoned as trash by an unidentified woman who decided it would cost too much to ship them out of state to the buyer, according to witnesses. City records indicate that the equipment had been purchased at an auction.


Proposal Could Cut Costs of State IT Services
The Rocky Mountain News
Gov. Bill Ritter and a group of bipartisan lawmakers unveiled legislation that would consolidate 1,200 information technology employees around the state under a new technology branch. The Office of Information Technology brings together previously disparate departments that were spending about $250 million a year. Eventually, workers hope to reduce spending by millions.


As Toll Dodgers Get Creative, Eyes of E-ZPass Are Watching
The New York Times
The E-ZPass Service Center on Staten Island examines about 1,500 photos a day to identify the license plate numbers of the cars and trucks that go through E-ZPass toll booths without the electronic tags, or with ones that were broken or expired. Toll dodgers -- witting and unwitting -- can cost municipalities millions of dollars each year.


Criticism of L.A. County's Voting System Grows
The Los Angeles Times
According to the office of Secretary of State Debra Bowen, Los Angeles is the only county in the state that requires decline-to-state voters to fill in an additional bubble on a ballot if they choose to vote in the Democratic or American Independent primary. Bowen said she was "astonished to see a ballot design this poorly thought out."


Midshipmen Design Biometric Programs for Car
The Baltimore Sun
Two Naval Academy midshipmen are working on a facial recognition system that powers up the car only after a Web camera scans drivers' faces to make sure they are authorized to take it out for a spin.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Friday, February 08, 2008  |  12:44 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Friday, Feb. 8, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


TSA Changes Practice Based on Passenger Blog Comments
ComputerWorld
Less than a week after the Transportation Security Administration launched a new blog site to gather feedback from air travelers and respond to their suggestions, it halted a practice at some airports that required travelers to remove all electronic equipment from carry-on luggage during security screenings.


Airport Security Technology Stuck In the Pipeline
The Washington Post
In the months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, government officials and industry leaders talked excitedly about how they expected technology to plug many of the gaps in airport security. But six years later, little has changed at airport checkpoints. Screeners still use X-ray machines to scan carry-on bags, and passengers still pass through magnetometers that cannot detect plastic or liquid explosives.


College Rolls Out IPv6 in Full Upgrade
ComputerWorld
Bucks County Community College is midway through a three-year, $750,000 network upgrade that depends heavily on IPv6 switching hardware that is used to support video collaboration applications. While IPv6 technology has been slow to catch on in business settings in the U.S., it is gaining ground in research and education settings such as the Bucks County two-year college in Newtown, Pa.

Major Tech Companies Join OpenID Board
InformationWeek
Google, IBM, Microsoft, VeriSign and Yahoo have joined the OpenID Foundation Board, a move that's expected to help the organization build mainstream support for a single-sign-on service for the Web, the foundation said Thursday. The idea behind the project is to relieve Web surfers of the need to remember and manage a variety of IDs and passwords.


D.C. Tax Office Computer Servers Found by Trash
The Washington Post
Federal authorities are investigating how two computer servers belonging to a D.C. office at the center of a corruption scandal wound up next to a commercial trash compactor in a Northwest Washington alley.


Worm Use to Steal Confidential Data Increasing in 2008
Government Technology
This year has begun with alarming data: in addition to Trojans, the use of worms to steal users' confidential data is also on the increase. According to data collected by Panda, while Trojans caused 24.41 percent of infections, worms accounted for 15.01 percent. This data contrasts with the 2007 data, in which attacks caused by worms were responsible for less than 10 percent of infections.


IT Seen Distrusting Remote Workers
CIO Insight
A new study conducted for Cisco by InsightExpress, released Tuesday, finds that a majority of IT departments think their telecommuters are becoming more lax in their online existence. And remote workers themselves say as much.


Audit Criticizes DOD’s IT Contingency Plans
Federal Computer Week
Mission-critical information systems operated and maintained by the Defense Department may be unable to sustain warfighter operations during a disruptive or catastrophic event, according to DOD’s Office of Inspector General.


Tech Execs Stump for Green IT on Capitol Hill
eWeek
Not so long ago, any sort of "green" discussion on Capitol Hill between the IT industry and lawmakers would have meant only one thing: the size of the political donation. But members of the Technology CEO Council, an IT lobbying group, were pitching a different green message this week: an energy initiative that leverages technology to achieve greater efficiencies in power consumption.


List of Voting Devices Grows
Albany Times Union
County election officials will now be able to choose among four machines to be available for disabled voters in the fall presidential election, according to a court order. Still, nothing is final. Two machines were added to the list with the new order, but another lawsuit, awaiting a decision on Monday, could add a fifth machine.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Thursday, February 07, 2008  |  11:24 AM

Headlines from around the Web for Thursday, Feb. 7, 2008
Compiled by Melanie Bender


Who’s Afraid of IPv4 Address Depletion? Apparently No One.
NetworkWorld
Who’s afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Not IT professionals, according to a new survey due this week by BT INS, a Mountain View, Calif. consulting firm. Only 16 percent of IT professionals consider IPv4 address depletion "a huge concern that has or will soon force us to migrate to IPv6," according to a BT INS survey of 310 IT professionals that was conducted in December 2007.

DHS, State Push ‘Passport-Lite’
Government Computer News
As the Homeland Security Department moves forward with its People Access Security System (PASS) card, travel document security professionals inside and outside government continue to question the use of radio frequency identification technology in the cards.


IT Pros, Remote Workers Fess Up to Security Lapses
NetworkWorld
Two separate security surveys this week on network access control reach similar conclusions: Employees have immoderate access rights, and management should face up to the challenge of reining in out-of-control access without sacrificing productivity gains.


CIA Monitors YouTube For Intelligence
InformationWeek
U.S. spies, now under the Director of National Intelligence, are looking increasingly online for intelligence, becoming major consumers of social media. "We're looking at YouTube, which carries some unique and honest-to-goodness intelligence," said Doug Naquin, director of the DNI Open Source Center, last October. "We're looking at chat rooms and things that didn't exist five years ago, and trying to stay ahead.


E-Notification Coming Soon For H-1B Visa Employers
InformationWeek
This spring, when employers flood the U.S. government with petitions to hire H-1B visa workers, those companies likely will have a new convenience -- electronic notification from the Homeland Security Department about whether those applications have been approved.


Clarity Sought on Electronics Searches
The Washington Post
The seizure of electronics at U.S. borders has prompted protests from travelers who say they now weigh the risk of traveling with sensitive or personal information on their laptops, cameras or cellphones. In some cases, companies have altered their policies to require employees to safeguard corporate secrets by clearing laptop hard drives before international travel.


Some Public Notices Find Home on Web
USA Today
At a time when consumers look to the Internet for everything from apartments to jobs, state lawmakers are considering ending the publication of government notices in newspapers, posting the information online instead. Federal and state statutes have required notices about such matters as condemnation of property or changes in regulation be brought to the public's attention in newspapers since the nation's founding.


Bush Wants a Security Clearance Reform Plan by April 30
Federal Computer Week
White House officials have issued a memo that directs agencies responsible for security clearances to have a plan that would speed the clearance process on the president's desk by April 30.


New Trends Plague Polls in California
The Sacramento Bee
The president of the California Voter Foundation was turned away from her Sacramento polling place because officials couldn't find her name on the precinct's rolls. Her frustrating experience was emblematic of the glitches plaguing the election process in Tuesday's statewide presidential primary. Precincts ran low on ballots, poll workers gave voters bum advice, and the final results won't be known for days.


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Web Headlines
By Allan Holmes | Tuesday, February 05, 2008  |  04:55 PM

Headlines from around the Web for Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2008.


States Prepare for Tests of Changes to Voting System
The New York Times
As voters in 23 states head to polls or caucuses today, local election officials around the country are bracing for a long, exhausting night and an array of unpredictable factors that might prevent some states from reporting final tallies until early Wednesday morning.


Super Tuesday: An e-voting report from the trenches
ComputerWorld
Almost a month after two candidates called for recounts in New Hampshire's primaries, observers will be watching to see how well the e-voting systems work in to